do they work together? do they work for the same country? or are they on opposing sides/enemies? is she ranked higher than he is? is he ranked higher than she is? does he take orders from her? or her from him?

did she mean to bomb the building in the country that was bombed? was this a mistake?

building that was bombed--public building? office? home?

did she see/read the radar wrong? did she give a wrong order? if so, was it due to timing of bomb? placement of bomb?

do they work together?No do they work for the same country?NO or are they on opposing sides/enemies?Yes!is she ranked higher than he is? is he ranked higher than she is? does he take orders from her? or her from him?irr or no to all

did she mean to bomb the building in the country that was bombed?Yes was this a mistake?No

building that was bombed--public building? office? home? Irr

did she see/read the radar wrong?No did she give a wrong order?No if so, was it due to timing of bomb? placement of bomb?No to both

Did the man die from the bomb? Did she mean to kill the man? If she knew the man was in the building, would she want it to be bombed? Did she misinterpret something she saw on the radar? Was there a "blip" (dot) on the radar? Was the man in a vehicle?

Did the man die from the bomb?Yes Did she mean to kill the man?Yes If she knew the man was in the building, would she want it to be bombed?Yes Did she misinterpret something she saw on the radar?No Was there a "blip" (dot) on the radar?Yes Was the man in a vehicle?No

was she ever a pilot? if so, was she supposed to fly the plane which dropped the bomb? was she supposed to be on the plane (in another position) that dropped the bomb? did she have an eyetest which caused her to be relegated to the ground, meaning--if she had kept the position she might have missed the target because of her bad eyesight?

was she ever a pilot?Irr if so, was she supposed to fly the plane which dropped the bomb?no was she supposed to be on the plane (in another position) that dropped the bomb?Nope did she have an eyetest which caused her to be relegated to the ground, meaning--if she had kept the position she might have missed the target because of her bad eyesight?No

If she had better eyes, would she see something which would keep her from killing the man?Yes-ish?

did she know she was color blind before joining the armed forces? did she fake the test so she could join the armed forces? did she somehow pass the test without it being discovered that she was color blind?

I thought you had to have a vision test before you were able to join the armed forces, and being color blind was something that could keep you from being accepted, but I could be wrong...

did she know she was color blind before joining the armed forces?Yes did she fake the test so she could join the armed forces?No did she somehow pass the test without it being discovered that she was color blind? No

I thought you had to have a vision test before you were able to join the armed forces, and being color blind was something that could keep you from being accepted, but I could be wrong...Yeah, you are. Explore the opposite of this

If she had had better eyes, would this have resulted in her doing her job better? Or worse? Did she intend to have him killed? Did the pilot of the plane survive his bombing run? If she had had better eyes, would she have directed the pilot to drop his bomb somewhere else? Not to drop it?

If she had not been color blind, would she have been doing a different job? Not in the armed forces at all?

If she had had better eyes, would this have resulted in her doing her job better? Or worse? Worse!Did she intend to have him killed? YesDid the pilot of the plane survive his bombing run?Yes and IrrIf she had had better eyes, would she have directed the pilot to drop his bomb somewhere else? Not to drop it?

If she had not been color blind, would she have been doing a different job?YES Not in the armed forces at all?Maybe still in the army, but not the exact job

"the opposite of this..." If you are already in the armed forces, does being colour blind affect your chances of promotion?No relevant?NoDid the armed forces know that she was colour blind? Yes!!

She was colour blind to *all* the colours? As in, she actually saw things in black and white? YES!Suffering from Monochromacy?Yes

her color blind condition was considered an advantage to the military and she was enlisted because of it? Yes!!to achieve a specific operation? YES!did her condition give her an advantage reading radar?YES YES!!!!

do I need to know more about reading radar & colors to figure why a monochromat would be better at reading radar than a person of normal vision? is there something relevant about this particular target that fits into her skill?

do I need to know more about reading radar & colors to figure why a monochromat would be better at reading radar than a person of normal vision?Not muchis there something relevant about this particular target that fits into her skill?YES!

s the reason he might have lived because if she had better eyes, she either would not be in the army at all or would have read the radar wrong so he might not have been hit?YES!!

should we define the target?No, not reallyground target? Could besingle story? tall? Could be bothis there something about the target which made it difficult for a normal sighted person to detect on radar?YES!

Is the target's colour relevant?No does it show up better if you see in black and white?Well the image does Is its size or shape relevant?No Is the material it's made of relevant?Yes-ish Is it transparent?No

so, let me guess...the pilot would have not seen the building from the air because of the camoflauge? so they needed the woman's help because of her monochramacy to detect the building on the radar?

do we need to know what the enemy did to camoflauge it? was the whole building camoflauged, so people on land couldn't see it--or was just the roof camoflauged, so flying planes couldn't see it? if just roof, was it painted to look like the sky?

so, let me guess...the pilot would have not seen the building from the air because of the camoflauge? so they needed the woman's help because of her monochramacy to detect the building on the radar? Yes, and I think you need only one more thing

do we need to know what the enemy did to camoflauge it? was the whole building camoflauged, so people on land couldn't see it--or was just the roof camoflauged, so flying planes couldn't see it? if just roof, was it painted to look like the sky?All irr